Indiana man upset after finding mother's casket exposed in cemetery

An Indiana man was upset when he found his mother's casket exposed under a piece of plywood at an Indianapolis cemetery.

Credit: Pexels/Pixabay

Credit: Pexels/Pixabay

An Indiana man was upset when he found his mother's casket exposed under a piece of plywood at an Indianapolis cemetery.

An Indiana man is upset after he said he found his mother's casket exposed in a hole under a piece of plywood in an Indianapolis cemetery nearly 10 months after her death, WXIN reported.

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"I'm kind of a little frustrated today," Larry Thompson said in a video he posted to Facebook on Sunday.

Thompson said he visited New Crown Cemetery to pay his respects to his mother, Alene Carter, who died Sept. 6, 2018. Carter would have been 70 Sunday.

In his video, recorded by his 14-year-old son, Thompson said his mother's gravestone had been erected on the plot next to where she was supposed to be buried, and the large black stone still did not have any information etched into it.

"We done paid for everything," Thompson said in the video.

When Thompson noticed the plywood over his mother's grave site, he lifted it to find his mother's casket exposed in a hole, WXIN reported.

"To me, it's not even deep enough," Thompson said in the video.

"To see her disrespected like that is wrong altogether," Thompson told WXIN.

Thompson said he spoke with the cemetery property owner, who told him they needed to move her, the television station reported. Thompson said no one had told him they were digging up her grave.

By Tuesday, crews had filled up the hole, according to WXIN.

"I mean that could be someone's kid, someone's family member in there just like it is my family member," Thompson told WXIN. "It is not right. It is wrong."

A cemetery spokesman told television station the headstone had been moved to the proper spot.

"The Carter family marker has been placed at the grave site as of July 2," the spokesman said. "However, as part of our commitment to all our client families, we guard their privacy and because of this, we do not discuss specific client matters with the media."

A spokesman for the Indiana Professional Licensing Agency told WXIN no administrative complaints against the cemetery have been filed with the State Board of Funeral & Cemetery Service.

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